X-Git-Url: https://git.openstreetmap.org./nominatim.git/blobdiff_plain/3fe49072feeb377da26bd488d3fc62aee9fadf56..607fef2d8fe96a3dde44b4294840210e1ecc81af:/VAGRANT.md diff --git a/VAGRANT.md b/VAGRANT.md index c662d5e4..e6a0fbb3 100644 --- a/VAGRANT.md +++ b/VAGRANT.md @@ -30,11 +30,11 @@ is. 1. Start the virtual machine - vagrant up + vagrant up ubuntu 2. Log into the virtual machine - vagrant ssh + vagrant ssh ubuntu 3. Import a small country (Monaco) @@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ is. To repeat an import you'd need to delete the database first - dropdb --username postgres -if-exists nominatim + dropdb -if-exists nominatim @@ -129,11 +129,13 @@ No. Long running Nominatim installations will differ once new import features (o bug fixes) get added since those usually only get applied to new/changed data. Also this document skips the optional Wikipedia data import which affects ranking -of search results. See [Nominatim instllation](http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Nominatim/Installation) for details. +of search results. See [Nominatim installation](http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Nominatim/Installation) for details. -##### Why Ubuntu, can I test CentOS/CoreOS/FreeBSD? +##### Why Ubuntu and CentOS, can I test CentOS/CoreOS/FreeBSD? -In general Nominatim will run in all these environment. The installation steps +There is a Vagrant script for CentOS available. Simply start your box +with `vagrant up centos` and then log in with `vagrant ssh centos`. +In general Nominatim will also run in the other environments. The installation steps are slightly different, e.g. the name of the package manager, Apache2 package name, location of files. We chose Ubuntu because that is closest to the nominatim.openstreetmap.org production environment. @@ -158,6 +160,8 @@ you edit `settings/local.php` with pgsql://postgres@localhost:9999/nominatim_it +To access postgres directly remember to specify the hostname, e.g. `psql --host localhost --port 9999 nominatim_it` + ##### My computer is slow and the import takes too long. Can I start the virtual machine "in the cloud"?